Written by
Edison — HK Expat Editor, 10+ years navigating Hong Kong's entertainment scene · Updated May 29, 2026
Let me tell you what changed. For years, Hong Kong's live music scene had a capacity problem. The venues that existed — AsiaWorld-Expo, Queen Elizabeth Stadium, the Hong Kong Cultural Centre — were adequate but not transformative. Stadium acts would route around us, going to Singapore or Tokyo, because Hong Kong didn't have a space that made sense for genuinely massive touring productions.
Then Kai Tak Sports Park opened in March 2025. Fifty thousand capacity in the main stadium, ten thousand in the indoor arena, sitting on the former airport site in Kowloon with an MTR station directly underneath it. The first year has been a statement: BIGBANG's 20th anniversary concert drew multiple sold-out nights. Post Malone, The Weeknd, Charlie Puth — all confirmed for the second half of 2026. The logjam broke. Hong Kong is now on the routing for the biggest tours in the world, and the city is responding accordingly.
Summary: The best live music in Hong Kong in 2026 is concentrated at Kai Tak Sports Park (50,000-cap stadium + 10,000 arena — Post Malone Sept 16, Charlie Puth Oct 21, The Weeknd Oct 30-31) and AsiaWorld-Expo (14,000-cap — TXT, DAY6, OneRepublic, Kraftwerk, K-pop circuit). Clockenflap (Central Harbourfront, Nov/Dec) remains the best local festival. Hong Kong Cultural Centre and Queen Elizabeth Stadium anchor the smaller venue programme.
The Venues and What's Coming
Kai Tak Sports Park is the infrastructure story that changed Hong Kong's relationship with live music. The complex sits on the former Kai Tak airport site — reclaimed land in Kowloon with the Tuen Ma Line MTR station right at the door — and it operates at a scale the city has never had before. The main stadium holds 50,000; the indoor arena holds 10,000. Both are state-of-the-art in terms of acoustics, production infrastructure, and audience experience. The acts confirmed for 2026 tell the story: Post Malone brings his BIG Stadium World Tour on September 16; Charlie Puth plays the Whatever's Clever World Tour on October 21; The Weeknd's After Hours Til Dawn Tour closes out October on the 30th and 31st. Earlier in the year, BIGBANG's 20th anniversary shows and South Korea's Dream Concert (February, featuring EXO CBX, Hwasa, SHINee's Taemin) demonstrated the venue's appeal to the K-pop market that Hong Kong has always been strong for. This is the venue that will define Hong Kong live music for the next decade.
Address1 Wang Kwong Road, Kai Tak, Kowloon
Chinese Name啟德體育園
MTRKai Tak Station (Tuen Ma Line), direct connection
CapacityStadium: 50,000; Indoor Arena: 10,000
2026 ShowsPost Malone (Sept 16), Charlie Puth (Oct 21), The Weeknd (Oct 30-31), BIGBANG, Dream Concert (Feb)
Ticketshkticketing.com; livenation.hk; prices HKD 500–2,800+
AsiaWorld-Expo remains Hong Kong's go-to mid-sized arena for international touring acts, operating with up to 14,000 capacity in its main hall. The location — connected to Hong Kong International Airport by a covered walkway, with Airport Express service from the city centre — makes it unusual: you can fly in, take the train, and be at the show within an hour of landing, which touring productions find genuinely appealing. The 2026 programme demonstrates the venue's range: TOMORROW X TOGETHER brought their ACT: TOMORROW World Tour, DAY6 played their 10th Anniversary Tour, Calum Scott and OneRepublic came through, and electronic legends Kraftwerk performed. The K-pop circuit at AWE runs almost continuously through the year. The facility is purpose-built for live events in a way that some of Hong Kong's older venues are not — the production infrastructure is modern, the sightlines are good throughout, and the transport connections work. The one caveat: Lantau is a distance from most of Hong Kong, and the last Airport Express back to the city runs at 1:15am, which affects how late you can stay for post-show activities.
AddressHong Kong International Airport, Lantau Island
Chinese Name亞洲國際博覽館
TransportAirport Express (AsiaWorld-Expo Station); 30 min from Central
CapacityUp to 14,000 (main arena configuration)
2026 ShowsTXT, DAY6, OneRepublic, Kraftwerk, ITZY, (G)I-DLE, Calum Scott + ongoing K-pop circuit
Ticketsasiaworld-expo.com; hkticketing.com
"Kai Tak changed everything. Hong Kong was always a great city for live music fans — now it's a great city for live music."
Clockenflap is the festival that defines Hong Kong's own relationship with live music in a way that the stadium shows cannot. It's been running annually since 2008, growing from a small outdoor gathering into one of Asia's most respected music and arts festivals — three days at the Central Harbourfront with multiple stages, a serious international and regional booking policy, and an atmosphere that is genuinely unlike anywhere else in Hong Kong. The setting is extraordinary: the harbour on one side, the Central skyline on the other, Victoria Harbour as a backdrop for every performance on the main stage. The crowd is uniquely Hong Kong — a mix of expats, locals, music fans from across the region, families with children, and people who've been coming since the beginning. The 2026 dates had not been officially confirmed as of May 2026 — Clockenflap typically announces in late summer for a November or December festival. Check clockenflap.com for line-up announcements and ticket pre-sales. Weekend passes typically sell out within hours of going on sale; single-day tickets are available but less flexible. If you're only going to one live music event in Hong Kong this year, let it be this one.
LocationCentral Harbourfront Event Space, near Exhibition Centre
Chinese Name時代革命音樂節
MTRWan Chai Station, Exit A1, 10 min walk; or Admiralty Exit C
2026 DatesTBC — typically November or December; check clockenflap.com
TicketsWeekend passes HKD 1,200–1,800; single-day HKD 500–700; sell out fast
Format3-day festival; multiple stages; arts, food, music; all ages
The Hong Kong Cultural Centre is the city's premier performing arts venue — a brutalist masterpiece (or crime, depending on your architectural politics) on the TST waterfront that has, somewhat controversially, no windows facing the harbour. What it does have is a Concert Hall (2,019 seats) that is one of the best acoustic spaces in Asia for classical music and acoustic performances, and a Grand Theatre (1,734 seats) that handles opera, ballet, and theatrical productions. The Hong Kong Philharmonic is the resident orchestra; the rest of the year-round programme covers international orchestras, visiting opera companies, jazz with serious credentials, world music, and occasional popular acts in the theatre space. For the theatre and musicals side of the programme, the Grand Theatre regularly hosts Broadway and West End touring productions. The URBTIX box office handles most ticketing. It's not a rock venue — but for the right kind of music in the right kind of space, there's nowhere better in Hong Kong.
Address10 Salisbury Road, Tsim Sha Tsui
Chinese Name香港文化中心
MTRTsim Sha Tsui Station, Exit E, 3 min walk
CapacityConcert Hall: 2,019; Grand Theatre: 1,734
ProgrammeHK Philharmonic, visiting orchestras, opera, jazz, world music; check hkculturalcentre.gov.hk
Ticketsurbtix.hk; HKD 100–600 depending on performance
Queen Elizabeth Stadium is the mid-capacity option that sits between the Cultural Centre's concert hall and AsiaWorld-Expo's arena — 3,500 seats in an indoor arena in Wan Chai that has hosted everyone from local Cantopop legends to international pop acts on the way up or down in terms of touring scale. The location is its biggest advantage: right in the middle of Wan Chai, walking distance from the MTR, surrounded by bars and restaurants for before or after. The venue is a little dated compared to newer facilities, but for the right act in the right configuration, it works very well. The intimacy of 3,500 seats for an act that used to play 10,000 can create extraordinary shows. Check URBTIX for the current programme. Also worth noting: QE Stadium is one of the primary venues for Hong Kong's sports events and the annual Rugby Sevens qualifying events, which affects availability during certain periods.
Address18 Oi Kwan Road, Wan Chai
Chinese Name伊利沙伯體育館
MTRWan Chai Station, Exit A3, 5 min walk
Capacity3,500 (arena configuration)
ProgrammePop, rock, Cantopop, sports events; check urbtix.hk
Ticketsurbtix.hk; HKD 250–800 depending on show
Concert Updates Every Thursday
New shows, ticket sales, festival announcements — Hong Kong live music, delivered weekly.
How to Get Tickets in Hong Kong
The Complete Ticketing Guide
- HK Ticketing (hkticketing.com) — The primary platform for commercial concerts at Kai Tak Sports Park and most major touring acts. Register an account before you need it; the queues for popular shows move fast.
- URBTIX (urbtix.hk) — The government-operated platform for Hong Kong Cultural Centre, Queen Elizabeth Stadium, City Hall, and other government venues. Arts events, classical music, theatre. Less frantic than HK Ticketing for most events.
- Live Nation Hong Kong (livenation.hk) — Handles the international touring acts they promote. Check here first for the major stadium shows at Kai Tak.
- Artist fan clubs and pre-sales — For K-pop shows, fan club pre-sales can access tickets before general sale. Yes!Card HK membership often includes pre-sale access for certain acts.
- Secondary market warning — Hong Kong has an active secondary market. Prices for popular shows (The Weeknd, major K-pop acts) can multiply by 3–5x on secondary platforms. Always try the official channels first; scalper activity is illegal in Hong Kong but difficult to enforce.
- For Clockenflap — Register at clockenflap.com and join the mailing list. Weekend passes go on sale in late summer and sell out within hours. Set a reminder for the on-sale date.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Kai Tak Sports Park?
Kai Tak Sports Park is Hong Kong's newest and largest entertainment venue, opened in March 2025 on the former Kai Tak airport site in Kowloon. The complex includes a 50,000-capacity main stadium and a 10,000-capacity indoor arena. It is served by Kai Tak MTR Station (Tuen Ma Line). Major 2026 shows include Post Malone (September 16), Charlie Puth (October 21), and The Weeknd (October 30-31).
When is Clockenflap 2026?
Clockenflap typically takes place at the Central Harbourfront in November or December. The 2026 dates had not been officially confirmed as of May 2026 — check clockenflap.com for the latest information. Weekend passes typically sell out within hours of going on sale.
How do I get tickets for Hong Kong concerts?
Tickets are sold through HK Ticketing (hkticketing.com) and URBTIX (urbtix.hk) for most venues. Live Nation Hong Kong (livenation.hk) handles many international acts. For K-pop shows, fan club pre-sales offer early access. Always buy from official sources — secondary market prices can be significantly inflated for popular shows.
What is the biggest concert venue in Hong Kong?
Since opening in March 2025, Kai Tak Sports Park is Hong Kong's largest concert venue with a 50,000-capacity outdoor stadium and a 10,000-capacity indoor arena. Before Kai Tak, AsiaWorld-Expo near the airport (14,000-capacity) was the largest dedicated concert space.
Concerts
Live Music
Kai Tak
AsiaWorld-Expo
Clockenflap
K-Pop
Festivals
2026